Tonight I am simply too tired to write. And so, without shame I spun the wheel and am reposting a previously written lesson from June 1 of last year. The focus of the post is about the swift passage of time, and as I re-read it I could not help but agree that the days are flying by so fast that I can scarcely keep up with them. I turn around and suddenly another week has past and shortly we will be at the end of June. Here is the post on time written on Day 323. Enjoy!
As I sat thinking about how quickly the days and weeks are passing, I was reminded of one of my favorite quotes on time of which I always only remember the first part, “Time is too slow for those who wait.” I never could remember the rest of it,only the general concept that we each perceive time from different perspectives. In this day of instant information I simply had to go to Google to find the full quote by the writer Henry Van Dyke:
“Time is too slow for those who wait, too swift for those who fear, too long for those who grieve, too short for those who rejoice, but for those who love, time is eternity.”(Of course Google also attributed a quote that was very much like Van Dyke’s to William Shakespeare,so who knows who really said it first…) Anyway, it seems that how we approach time is all about perspective. But these days so many people I talk to, even young people, all seem to be conscious of the speeding up of our days. When my twenty-one year old daughter says, “Where did the time go?”I shake my head and wonder where indeed?
The other quote about time that stood out for me many years ago occurred during one of the Star Trek movies in which a character says to Captain Jean Luc Picard, “Time is the fire in which we burn.” When I googled that quote it came up as being attributed to two people–one a poet and the other was none other than Gene Roddenberry, creator of the Star Trek series. In the film Captain Picard has the opportunity to live in an alternate time,o ne in which he could live out the life he’d have had if he’d made different choices. In the alternate timeline he marries and has children instead of leading the life of a starship captain boldly going where no one (they used to say “no man”) had gone before. He got the chance to experience things he’d been missing in his life–the connection to a loving life partner, children to nurture and raise, a quiet, contented life. In the end of course he remembered that he was a starship captain and returned to his “real” life of unattached, relatively solitary space exploration “seeking out new life and new civilizations.”
So what does any of this have to do with gratitude? Perhaps not much. Except to say that I am grateful for each day that God gives me on this planet. Some days I make good use of the time I’m given, and others I probably squander it, wishing I could get a do-over. I try to approach my days with the highest intentions possible–to do good where I can, to do no harm where I can’t, to live with as much integrity, compassion, and love as I can. To simply do the best I can with what I am given each day. I am grateful for the time I have with my children–the three of us living together again under one roof for the first time in many months and possibly for the last time in the foreseeable future as they continue into their respective futures and I into mine. I am grateful for times spent with my siblings, either in person or virtually. The times with family are among the most precious to me,and I find myself wishing I could have them much more often than I do.
I am grateful for time and the many ways in which it expresses itself. I am learning as best I can to live in the moment,whatever that moment happens to bring;to stop regretting past actions and decisions and fretting about futures I have no way of knowing will unfold. It’s not easy,this living in the moment thing,but if I can truly learn to savor the moments of my life I will really have accomplished something.